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Pezer wrote:Was Nietzsche evil?
V-OutOfTheWilderness wrote:Pezer wrote:Was Nietzsche evil?
What did he do?
Pezer wrote:I am asking honestly though, is Nietzsche evil?
I won't even follow up with questions, I just want to know christians' opinions on this.
Pezer wrote:Was Nietzsche evil?
Calrid wrote:Pezer wrote:Was Nietzsche evil?
Yes. Any more questions?
Pezer wrote:I am asking honestly though, is Nietzsche evil?
I won't even follow up with questions, I just want to know christians' opinions on this.
Nietzsche was morally and ethically bankrupt in certain ways though.
I know on philosophy boards and in the first year of a philosophy degree, Nietzsche is big shit, but aside from that, no one really gives a shit about him who does know who he is, and everyone else in the world has never even heard of him.
statiktech wrote:
I disagree. He's even bigger when you actually understand what he's saying, which most people seem to mistakenly assume at first glance. It took me a couple years of reading/researching other philosophers before I went back to discover a profound depth in Nietzsche I had never realized before. I thought I had, but not like this. I'm not sure I've ever read another philosopher with a comparable literary style. People often assume a certain simplicity in Nietzsche's writing due to his eloquence, but tend to miss the profundity of what he doesn't say or spell out in detail. Some seem to consider Nietzsche and Heidegger very similar, for example. I don't see it. To me, they are opposites in the sense that Nietzsche said less, but had far more meaning.
Pezer wrote:I am asking because I know how Nietzsche viewed christianity, but I don't know how christians see Nietzsche.
Well, that's not entirely true, I know how the Opus Dei see him. In fact, all of Nietzsche's books are in a special "do not read these books because they corrupt the soul" list that they have. I have had conversations with one member and he basically claimed that he was a nihilist. Funny because Nietzsche says that christians are the nihilists.
But mostly, having been brutally expelled from the good and evil paradigm by Nietzsche, I now have little grasp over what actually constitutes "evil," so I really want to know. The fact that I obviously admire Nietzsche so much I think turns real christians off of talking to me or taking my questions as honest, and I don't blame them. Nietzsche himself I am sure was able to hold long and respectful conversations with christians, but philosophy forum "nietzscheans" rarely are.
iambiguous wrote:Was Nietzsche evil?
As though this were the same as asking, "was Nietzsche a man"?
statiktech wrote:Pezer wrote:I am asking because I know how Nietzsche viewed christianity, but I don't know how christians see Nietzsche.
Well, that's not entirely true, I know how the Opus Dei see him. In fact, all of Nietzsche's books are in a special "do not read these books because they corrupt the soul" list that they have. I have had conversations with one member and he basically claimed that he was a nihilist. Funny because Nietzsche says that christians are the nihilists.
But mostly, having been brutally expelled from the good and evil paradigm by Nietzsche, I now have little grasp over what actually constitutes "evil," so I really want to know. The fact that I obviously admire Nietzsche so much I think turns real christians off of talking to me or taking my questions as honest, and I don't blame them. Nietzsche himself I am sure was able to hold long and respectful conversations with christians, but philosophy forum "nietzscheans" rarely are.
Interesting [not sarcasm]. I've never actually met a member of Opus Dei, let alone engaged one in philosophic conversation. Was he actually open to discussion or more just stating his beliefs? I'm not surprised they think of him as a nihilist -- that seems a popular conception amongst those who fancy demonizing him without having to do all that pesky reading. My experience is that Christians generally either don't know who he is, as Smears suggested, or write him off as a lunatic.
I'm interested in what you'll conclude. I figure Nietzsche saw "good" and "evil" as fundamentally religious concepts, and without any actual constituents. They are essentially just labels that command an appeal to authority and promote complacency.
statiktech wrote:Nietzsche was morally and ethically bankrupt in certain ways though.
How so?
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